Skip Navigation

In castle/fortress design, what do you call the wall placed immediately inside the gates that prevents the enemy from having a straight shot into your fortress?

imgur.com imgur.com

Discover the magic of the internet at Imgur, a community powered entertainment destination. Lift your spirits with funny jokes, trending memes, entertaining gifs, inspiring stories, viral videos, and so much more from users.

imgur.com

You see something similar in the entranceway to public bathrooms that don't have doors, where it kind of zig-zags for privacy. I'm trying to figure out what this kind of architectural feature is called. Thanks!

7

You're viewing a single thread.

7 comments
  • https://gwern.net/doc/history/2007-keeley.pdf

    End of page 62 and all of 63 - looks like a "screened" baffled gate.

    "Titulum" is the name of that specific wall.

    • I found a Wikipedia article that expands on motivations for the design: Titulus_(fortification)

      The description in the wiki article and the orientation of the diagrams on page 63 of the Keeley document convince me that the more common arrangement was to place the detatched screening wall segment on the exterior of the curtain with an interior version sometimes used either instead of or in addition to the exterior screen.

      Edit: I think I read the pg63 diagram orientations wrong, so I think my point is mostly that it can be either inside or outside, and that this whole PDF is really cool.

7 comments